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The Park and Sun® TP-179™ volleyball net system allows your backyard or local park to host tournament-level games. The set includes a heavy-duty net, poles, ground stakes, Pull-Down™ guyline system, and pre-measured boundaries with anchors.

Park & Sun Sports - 2001 SGMA Member Heroes Award Honoree. Presented by the Sporting Goods Manufacturers Association, Park & Sun Sports was honored for the company's dedication to the growth of volleyball, their involvement and support of numerous tournaments and fund raisers, and their continued support of youth volleyball through the United States Youth Volleyball League.

We got this to setup and play in our backyard this summer. Unfortunately, this net system is marginally OK at best. The tension rings and guy lines don't work well at all. The net sags pitifully in the middle. You can tighten it up, but the tension rings slowly slip and it dips in the middle again. Also, with the net straps that simply slide over the poles, there is no tension in the bottom of the net, so you can't play off the net at all.

I'm pretty disappointed in this net system. It's great that it's portable, but isn't what I was expecting at all. I would not buy it again.

It took my little brother and nephew both in their teens to set up net, I would say they were done in 20 min or less. It was awesome, it never came down on us, it held up good. I would definitely recommend this product. Can't wait to use it again.

I bought this volleyball net for a party I was having for my son's VB team. I discovered that the net was missing assembly loops (the loops that the pole slides through), making it difficult to assemble correctly. The party was the next day and I was out of time, so I kept it. I wish I hadn't. Waste of money.

Our first use was this 4th of July. We were ready to set up the court and something was wrong with the poles. They were installed backwards so they were stuck. I was really bummed and frustrated. My brother in law was trying yank one of the poles from the other but it was useless. They were stuck and we didn't have any tools to work with. Finally, after a half an hour we were able to dislodge both poles from each other. Overall, everything was pretty good.